*Islamic street preachers*
From Boston to Lahore and beyond, the tentacles of taqwacore - aka Islamic
punk rock - are spreading. And it's giving disenfranchised young Muslims a
voice, says Riazat Butt.


There can't be that many female playwrights who are deaf, punk and Muslim,
so Sabina England is something of a find. With a lurid Mohawk and leather
jacket slathered with slogans, she looks every inch the rebel and has an
attitude to match.

Sabina, who says she lives in the "shitty midwest of the United States" or
the "HELL-HOLE OF BOREDOM AND YUPPIES", is part of a subculture that, until
a few years ago, existed only on paper.

The Taqwacores - a novel about a fictitious Muslim punk scene in the US -
has spawned an actual movement that is being driven forward by young Muslims
worldwide. Some bands - such as the Kominas - have a cult following. Others,
such as Sabina, are virtually unknown. In a brief email exchange, she lays
out some harsh truths.

*You're a playwright. What do you write about?*

"I write plays about fucked up people in fucked up situations, because we're
all fucked up human beings that live in a fucked up society. People need to
quit whining and shut up and realise that we're all freaks, whether we admit
it or not."

*Where are your ideas from? *

"Being a deaf woman from an Indian Muslim family growing up in both England
and the US, I've never felt I fit in or belonged anywhere. So I was always
forced to be an outsider, and because of this, I'd just watch people and
observe their actions and words. I guess a lot of my ideas come from my
alienation and anger."

*How well known is the taqwacore phenomenon where you are? *

"Muslims around here would rather act like a model minority and don't really
want to rattle anybody's chain. I really want to move to New York City, if I
can get my plays produced there. Unfortunately it seems many theatre
companies are too scared to do my works, or think I only cater to Indians
and Pakistanis and won't attract white people. But they're fucking wrong,
and they can't see beyond racial boundaries. Fucking worthless piece of
shites."

*What does taqwacore mean to you? *

"It means being true to myself, having my own faith, and interpreting Islam
the way I want to, without feeling guilty or being looked down at by other
Muslims."

*What is the future for taqwacore? *

"It's gonna get bigger. A lot of Muslim kids are tired of being told what to
do, how to think, what to believe in, and how to act, by their parents.
There are 'the angry muslim kids' who wanna grow beards and pray five times
a day, and then there are the OTHER 'angry Muslim kids' who wanna get drunk
and say a huge big 'fuck you' to the Muslim population. Or maybe they just
don't care and wanna sit at home and not think about Osama's video speeches
about how America is the Great Satan."

How her words would fare with Michael Muhammad Knight, author of The
Taqwacores and an unwitting idol to the young and restless, is anyone's
guess. Knight, who is 29 and lives in New York with his dog Sunny - "not as
in Sunni Muslim" - downplays his achievement of single-handedly inspiring
this subculture that has produced artists such as the Kominas, Secret Trial
Five, Vote Hezbollah, Al-Thawra, 8-Bit and Diacritical.

"There was a scene already," says Knight modestly, whose next novel will be
titled Osama Van Halen. "I just gave it a name. There were kids out there,
doing their thing. I don't think of it as a movement, though, just a group
of friends supporting each other."

Knight wrote the book to deal with his own issues. He converted to Islam as
a teenager and admits he "burned out" from being so religious. "I was so
intense. I felt Islam was so black and white and there were no grey areas.
These Muslim kids, who are punks, they are in these grey areas."

The kids he refers to have all devoured Knight's work, some taking it
literally.

"One kid," he says, "thought the book was non-fiction and thought that stuff
in the book actually happened. He got in touch. He said if it wasn't real,
that he would make it real." He sounds worried by the suggestion that his
book will be a manifesto for Muslim punks. "If the scene develops, I don't
want it to be based on my book."

The words stable, door, horse and bolt spring to mind. Some Muslims are
deeming his book to be nothing short of a revelation. "When I read The
Taqwacores," says Basim Usmani, frontman of The Kominas, "all my
reservations about Islam melted away."

Usmani was born in New York and moved around the US when he was growing up.
"I had this identity that stretched way further back than these
disenfranchised white kids I was hanging out with, but they were the ones
who showed me the most respect. I entered America where I was weird and,
when I went back to Pakistan, I was weird there too. I was too Pakistani to
be American and too American to be Pakistani."

His aggression was ongoing, although he freely admits his rage didn't come
from social dynamics. "In Boston I was middle class. In Pakistan, where I am
now, I am definitely upper class. But the poverty here is intense and that
makes me angry."

Basim first played with Boston-based outfit Malice In Leatherland,
supporting horror punk band the Misfits. It was during this time that he
heard about Knight's book.

"I read the book and I'm amazed. I send him an email and he called. I saw a
lot of myself in it. Sometimes I feel like I'm living in a story." Neither
he nor his taqwacore comrades confess to embracing the more debauched antics
of the novel - which has one character urinating over the Qur'an and then
reading from it and a female Muslim veil-wearing punk, performing oral sex,
onstage, in front of 200 people.

Understandably, Usmani was nervous approaching Shahjehan Khan, also in the
Kominas, about the book. "I didn't know how he would react, he's not punk,
but he was cool about it. He read it in one day. You could say it was a
catalyst for the Kominas." Their songs are irreverent and un-PC. His
favourite track, he says with a snigger, is "I Want A Handjob" - a jibe at
Pakistani rockers Junoon (who launched a Muslims For Bush campaign for the
2004 elections).

Usmani left the US just as the Kominas were breaking through into mainstream
culture. But he has a new band - the Dead Bhuttos, a variation on the Dead
Kennedys (who released their first single through the independent record
label Alternative Tentacles, the very label that picked up Knight's book for
distribution).

A future project, hopes Usmani, will be a Punjabi version of the Billy Bragg
song There Is Power In A Union. "I'd like it to be a song for the Pakistani
workers 'cos they don't really have one," he muses.

The Kominas, currently on a gigging hiatus, will tour later this year in
North America. "It seems weird to leave just when we were on the brink. If
I'd stayed then I would have been playing to sympathetic white liberals. I
didn't want that. In Pakistan, people want to rebel against the police and
religious authority and punk is the perfect way to do that."

He's put a downpayment on a bus and decorated it with the shahadah [the
Muslim declaration in the oneness of God]. "I have no idea how we're going
to get it through customs."

Meanwhile, Khan is in Boston mixing the Kominas debut album: "We've put some
EPs out but this is our first official release. There will be remixes of our
old stuff like Suicide Bomb The Gap."

Khan says he looks like a typical engineer - with glasses and a goatee - and
comes from a comfortable, middle-class background. But he appreciates what
taqwacore has done for him. "I was like, where has this book been all my
life? None of us know where taqwacore is going or what's going to happen. It
is a subculture that could influence culture in general. It's nice to be
part of something at the beginning."

One of the newest recruits to the taqwacore scene is Secret Trial Five, from
Vancouver. Lead vocalist Sena Hussain, 25, took her inspiration directly
from the Kominas. "We saw them play and we were all into punk music anyway.
We haven't had a chance to rattle some cages, we only got together last
summer, but I expect we will. That's the point of punk."

Proposed title tracks include Hey, Hey, Guantanamo Bay and Emo-hurram, a pun
on the first month of the Islamic calendar. And, in a male-dominated
culture, she thinks they will face challenges from all sides. "It's another
thing that drives us," she says, "Muslim women are seen as helpless and
oppressed. We want to prove that wrong. I used to sport a mohawk, I don't
now, but we will totally play up the punk thing.

"There's so much animosity towards Muslims and we need a dissenting voice to
say 'fuck you' to people who pigeonhole us." Hussain, who is looking for a
new guitarist, adds: "It's only fitting that we identify ourselves as
taqwacore, that's where we got our inspiration from, and I think that's the
way the genre will grow - and I hope it does."



The Guardian
Saturday April 28, 2007


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